Albuquerque Journal

SOCIAL MEDIA AS lifesaver

People with chronic diseases are going online to find organ donors

- BY DEANESE WILLIAMS-HARRIS CHICAGO TRIBUNE

CHICAGO — When Melanie Perry peers out of the seventh-floor window of her Kenwood high-rise, she has a clear view of the helicopter pad at the University of Chicago Medical Center.

“It’s as if God is telling me your kidney is in your view,” she said. “God is keeping me. He can move mountains.”

Perry, 34, has spent most of her life hoping for better days. When she was a girl, she was diagnosed with lupus, an autoimmune disease that claimed both kidneys. After her first transplant failed, her 16-year relationsh­ip with dialysis began. Every week, she undergoes three appointmen­ts, each up to four hours.

The grueling routine has saved her life, but it has also made it harder to get another transplant. After so many years of undergoing dialysis and receiving blood products, “I’m sort of like a melting pot and that makes it hard to find a match,” Perry said.

So she has turned to social media, hoping to reach as many people as possible willing to donate a kidney. “I’m emotionall­y drained,” she said recently. “I’m afraid of not being able to get (a kidney). … I’m afraid of having to live the rest of my life on dialysis.” Perry is not alone. More than 8 million Americans suffer from chronic kidney disease and about 450,000 of them are kept alive through dialysis. About 100,000 people are waiting for a kidney transplant, 300 of them near death, according to the Gift of Hope Organ and Tissue Donor Network. Just in Chicago, about 3,165 people are on the waiting list.

Most people in this country waiting for an organ transplant need a kidney. Next in line are those waiting for a liver, then a heart, then lungs. The wait for a kidney donation can be years, compared to weeks or months for a heart.

Like Perry, more and more people are resorting to social media as medical advances make it increasing­ly possible for strangers to become living organ donors.

Facebook, for example, allows members to share their organ donor status and helps them register to become an organ donor. Several other online sites offer advice and help people either locate potential donors or register as one. They include WaitList Zero, the National Kidney Registry and the Alliance for Paired Kidney Donation.

A recent article in the journal Bioethics proposed Facebook-type platforms where people looking for living donors could post informatio­n about themselves.

“One can appeal to people by providing facts, figures, and impartial generalize­d reports,” write Greg Moorlock and Heather Draper with the Warwick Medical School in England. “But something that prompts a stronger and immediate emotional reaction may be more effective at motivating them to provide a solution.”

The authors worry that such networks could be abused by people who profit from “the undergroun­d organ market.” But they argue that the benefits are still worth looking into. “Using ‘identifiab­le victims’ within a personaliz­ed approach to promoting donation may be an effective way to increase living kidney donation,” they conclude.

The National Kidney Foundation also urges caution. “Be careful and use common sense,” it says on its website. “Ask your transplant center for advice. Don’t put yourself in a vulnerable situation where someone can try and take advantage of your situation. The issue of buying and selling organs may come up. This practice has been illegal in the U.S. since 1984, when it was outlawed by the National Organ Transplant Act.”

Live donors — like the son who donated a kidney to his father, Chicago police superinten­dent Eddie Johnson — are key to reducing the long waiting list, according to Kevin Cmunt, CEO of the Gift of Hope Organ and Tissue Donor Network.

The network has overseen about 260 live donation transplant­s and its goal is 500 by 2020, Cmunt said. Reaching more strangers would help the group meet its goal.

“A person can function quite well and normally with one kidney,” he said. “With education about live donation, we can make people comfortabl­e with the process and hopefully lower the number of deaths each year.”

Cmunt acknowledg­ed that many in need of a kidney find it difficult to ask a relative or a friend, much less a stranger.

Perry said she had to get up the nerve to ask her family. When no one was a match, she finally went to Facebook.

She posted her status on Facebook and asked friends to get tested to see if they were a match to her. She also asked them to reach out to their friends. She posted her appeal in early March and has not found anyone yet.

Meanwhile, her situation is getting more urgent. Last year, tests showed that calcificat­ions in her body — abnormal accumulati­ons of calcium salts — were worsening.

The calcium buildup will eventually get to the point where Perry will not be able to receive a new kidney, according to Dr. Yolanda Becker, surgical director of the kidney and pancreas transplant team at the University of Chicago Medicine. “Dialysis is a lifesaving procedure that cleanses the poison out of your body, but it’s not natural,” she said. “Eventually, you get hardening of the arteries.”

 ?? ERIN HOOLEY/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Melanie Perry talks to another patient as she undergoes her tri-weekly dialysis treatment, removing toxins from her blood, at DaVita Woodlawn Dialysis clinic in Chicago. As a child, Perry developed lupus, resulting in damage to her kidneys.
ERIN HOOLEY/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Melanie Perry talks to another patient as she undergoes her tri-weekly dialysis treatment, removing toxins from her blood, at DaVita Woodlawn Dialysis clinic in Chicago. As a child, Perry developed lupus, resulting in damage to her kidneys.
 ??  ?? Patient Care Technician Monique Morales adjusts tubes in Melanie Perry’s leg as she undergoes her tri-weekly dialysis treatment at DaVita Woodlawn Dialysis clinic in Chicago.
Patient Care Technician Monique Morales adjusts tubes in Melanie Perry’s leg as she undergoes her tri-weekly dialysis treatment at DaVita Woodlawn Dialysis clinic in Chicago.

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